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Designing Responsive Applications with Ext JS

In today’s world, users expect to be able to use web applications not only on their desktop computers, but also their mobile devices, which come in all shapes and sizes. The requirement to make an application so adaptive can seem overwhelming. Fortunately Ext JS 5 provides all the tools needed to make your application conform to any screen size, shape or orientation.

Introducing responsiveConfig

With the new tablet support in Ext JS 5 comes “responsiveConfig”, a powerful new feature for making applications respond dynamically to changes in screen size or orientation. responsiveConfig is enabled using one of two classes:

Making Components Responsive

For performance reasons, Ext JS Components do not have responsive features enabled by default, so to make a Component responsive you’ll need to use the responsive plugin. Add the responsive plugin to the class body to make all instances responsive, or add it to the instance config to enable responsiveness for a single Component instance:

plugins:'responsive'

Once you have added the responsive plugin to your Component config, your Component will gain a “responsiveConfig” configuration option. responsiveConfig is simply an object with keys that represent conditions under which certain configs will be applied. For example, suppose your application has a Tab Panel, and you want the Tab Bar to be left aligned in landscape mode, but top aligned in portrait mode. You can use the words “landscape” and “portrait” as keys in the responsiveConfig object to dynamically set the Panel’s 'tabPosition' config in response to device orientation change:

‘tall’ - True if ‘width’ is less than ‘height’ regardless of device type

‘wide’ - True if ‘width’ is greater than ‘height’ regardless of device type

‘width’ - The width of the viewport

height’ - The height of the viewport

You can combine these variables in a variety of ways to create complex responsive rules. For example, the following responsiveConfig hides a Component if the viewport is less than 768 pixels wide and the viewport’s height is greater than its width:

Which Configs Can Be Responsive?

Internally, the framework monitors the viewport for resize and orientation change, and it re-evaluates all of the responsive rules whenever either one of these events occurs. Any matching rules will have setters called for all of their configs. This means that in order for a configuration option to be used with responsiveConfig, it must have a setter. In the above example, we can use “visible” as a responsiveConfig because Ext.Component has a setVisible() method.

Making Classes Responsive

responsiveConfig is most useful for Components, but sometimes you may find the need to make other classes respond to screen size as well. For classes other than Ext.Component, this is accomplished by mixing in Ext.mixin.Responsive. For example, an instance of the following class will have its “foo” config updated whenever the screen shape changes from “wide” to “tall” or vice versa:

Try it Out

We wanted to make sure that the new responsive design features of Ext JS could stand the test of a real-world application, so we built an application that leverages responsiveConfig to adapt to a wide range of screen sizes and orientations on both desktops and tablets. The app can be found here.

Try resizing your desktop browser window, or rotating your tablet, and look for the following changes to the application’s presentation and layout:

Main navigation is positioned to the left in “wide” mode and to the top in “tall” mode

Tab icons are aligned to the top in “tall” mode, and to the left in “wide” mode

Tab text is centered in “tall” mode and left aligned in “wide” mode

In “tall” mode if the screen becomes too narrow for the navigation bar, an overflow menu tool will display, and the navigation items will display in a menu.

We’re sure that these new features of Ext JS 5 will make the task of developing cross-device applications a lot easier, and we hope you’ll give it a try. Who knows, you might even have fun!

Written by Phil Guerrant
Phil is a Sencha software engineer who works on Ext JS. He has over 10 years of experience as a developer and specializes in HTML5 and web development, UI, and agile methodologies.

Richie Bartlett

barbatrukko

Tad

Cool idea! It’s about time this has been added to ExtJS! Unfortunately, it’s really buggy on an iPhone5 running iOS 7.1.1. Maybe it’s just because it hasn’t been setup specifically for the phone dimensions in this demo?

Phil Guerrant

@TimG @Tad Ext JS doesn’t currently support phones. Our current testing targets are all desktop, laptop, and tablet devices, so ymmv when it comes to iPhone/windows phone

@FloSt @barbatrukko @Tad The MyBiz app works for me on Android 4.2.2 with chrome 35 (Galaxy Tab). I don’t have a Nexus handy but I know we tested on the Nexus prior to releasing 5.0.0. Any further details you can provide would be helpful - we’ll look into it on our end as well.

Sawood Alam

FloSt

I made screenshots and uploaded them. Hope it helps. http://imgur.com/a/TF2q8
Changing rotation pretty often breaks it all, as well as the content is not scaled correctly (cut off at the borders but no scrolling enabled), and sometimes there is no menu what so ever